Since July 11, at least ten, and possibly more prisoners at Jackson GA have refused food, vowing to fast till death if they cannot receive medical care, visitation and fair, transparent status reviews. The state of Georgia is adamant, reportedly threatening the prisoners with death where they are rather than even hospitalize or closely monitor their deteriorating condition.

Georgia's massive Diagnostic and Classification Prison near Jackson is the place where Troy Davis was murdered by the state last year. It may be the place where state authorities manage to kill more prisoners this year. On June 11, ten prisoners, most or all of whom have been in solitary confinement for 17 and half months, since the courageous and peaceful strike by Georgia prisoners in December 2010, began refusing food.

They demanded medical care, including but not limited to care for injuries sustained in the wave of retaliatory beatings which were the state's response to the December 2010 strike, when more than one prisoner was beaten into coma and paralysis. In the past year and a half, Miguel Jackson and other prisoners whom the state appears to believe were leaders of the December 2010 strike have been denied showers for weeks and months on end. They demanded access to these basic needs, and the restoral of the meager personal property inmates are allowed to accumulate behind the walls. They demanded that authorities cease arbitrarily removing the visitation privileges of their families and their ability to access legal books and other assistance. They demanded that the Department of Corrections follow its own procedures and review the status of prisoners in punitive isolation at 30 day intervals, and that the hearings and their records be public.

“These are dignified, peaceful, minimal demands,” declared Rev. Kenneth Glasgow of the TOPS Society and the Prodigal Child Project. After more than two weeks, the men are starving and their health is in great danger. Would the state of Georgia rather let these men die than give them medical care? Is that what we' ve come to?

“It's time to call the warden at Jackson Prison, to call the governor, to call the Department of Corrections in respectful support of the dignified demands of these prisoners. It's time to call today and not delay. This is a matter of life and death and human dignity.

“If you're in Atlanta you can join us at Thursday at 6:30 PM at Project South, 9 Gammon Avenue for a film screening on prisons as social control and a discussion afterward. This is your chance to connect with real people trying to do something in the real world about the prison state. You can also join us Friday from 10AM to 2PM on the steps of the state capitol, the Washington Street side, for a press conference and rally demanding humane and civilized treatment of our brothers and sisters behind the walls, and especially for the relief of the hunger strikers at Jackson.“And whether you're in Atlanta or not, we want you to join us for a one day fast Monday, July 2, in solidarity with Georgia's prisoners, who are themselves victims of brutal crimes committed by the state. Prisoners are are brothers, our uncles, our nieces and our daughters, our sons and our cousins. When we allow them to be confined with education, without recreation, with due process and without dignity or hope we debase ourselves and disgrace each other.

Call Georgia's governor Nathan Deal right now, and tell him we are better than that. Ask him to do the right thing.”

The call for a one-day solidarity fast on Monday is being repeated in churches and communities around metro Atlanta and beyond.

“The Georgia Green Party endorses Monday's solidarity fast,” said spokesperson Hugh Esco. “We hope that people of faith and others will join it, and will spread the word. The US has 2.4 million prisoners, far more than anyplace else on earth. African-Americans are 12% of our people, but more than 40% of the locked down. Latinos are 13% but almost 30% of all prisoners. That means 70% of US prisoners come from the 25 percent of our population that is non-white.

“Our nation's over-reliance upon prisons as answers to homelessness, to mental illness, to drug use has taken a terrific toll on our families and communities and futures. It's time that people in Georgia and across the country work to roll back the prison state. We hope you'll sign the petition to Georgia's governor at www.endmassincarceration.com, to forward it widely, along with whatever news becomes available of the strikers' status. We hope you will join the fast on Monday July 2 in solidarity with the prisoners, and tell your pastor, your family, your friends and co-workers about it.

“And above all, we need you to call Ja404-656-1776ckson Prison, the Georgia Department of Corrections and the governor to demand fairness for the men behind the walls, some of whom have not eaten since June 11. The state should also release the names of all those it has placed under close confinement at Jackson and spell out in public why they are confined there. Secret imprisonment without public trial has been illegal since the 13th century, and this is the 21st.”

Black Agenda Report will follow this story with a Friday update, containing interviews with the family members of the strikers, and more about Monday's solidarity fast. Meanwhile, check the phone numbers below and make the calls. The clock is running. Those behind the walls are doing all they can. Their fate is in our hands.

For its part, the Georgia Green Party sponsors an ongoing effort to work with the families of the incarcerated and others called the Campaign to End Mass Incarceration, and maintains a web page at http://www.endmassincarceration.org.

The Campaign to End Mass Incarceration has a list of 13 demands. To find out what you can do, and who you can connect with to do it, especially in Georgia, visit and register at www.endmassincarceration.org, and they'll be in touch with you soon.

Bruce A. Dixon is managing editor at Black Agenda Report and a state committee member of the Georgia Green Party. Contact him at bruce.dixon(at)georgiagreenparty.org.

1 Comment

I live in Ga and have two relatives who are inmates in its prisons. I have another relative who died of a heart attack in prison; fellow inmates covertly wrote the family a letter indicating it was twenty minutes before he receive medical care.

I believe Bruce Dixon is sincere, but calling Governor Deal is a complete waste of time. The sad truth is the vast majority of Georgia residents , black or white, could care less about how inmates are treated.

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